The Individual and the Community In The Crucible

The Individual and the Community In The Crucible


The Individual and the Community In The Crucible
What One Would do to get others on her side.

In The Crucible by Arthur Miller, the characters in the play face different problems and accusations that they do not always know how to handle. One theme that sums up the play is the individual trying to destroy anyone who gets in the way of her acceptance in the community. Abigail, the niece of Reverend Parris, starts out motivated simply by clearing her name and being an accepted member of the community, but, as her power grows she wants to control the community by fear.
Abigail instigates her problems by lying, in order to avoid punishment and to remain an accepted member of the community. Author Miller describes that she has, “an endless capacity for dissembling.”(9) She starts out by trying to convince her uncle, Reverend Parris, that she never participated in any acts of witchcraft. She needs an excuse for Betty, her cousin, who lays unconscious in bed. She explains to Proctor, “Oh, posh!…We were dancin’ in the woods last night, and my uncle leaped in on us. She took fright, is all.”(22) Mary Warren suggests that they confess everything so that they will just get whipped rather than hung. When Abigail hears this, she retorts, “Oh, we’ll be whipped!”(19) Abigail says this because she plans on saying or doing everything in her power to stay alive.
Being thrown out of the house and loosing respect in the community caused Abigail to become angered and plan revenge an Goody Proctor. Abigail, in order to get rid of Goody Proctor, claims that Goody Proctor...

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